Ugur (god)

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Major cult centerIsin, Girsu
SuccessorIshum
SpouseŠī-šarrat
Ugur
Sukkal of Nergal, war god
Major cult centerIsin, Girsu
SuccessorIshum
Genealogy
SpouseŠī-šarrat

Ugur was a Mesopotamian god associated with war and death, originally regarded as an attendant deity (sukkal) of Nergal. After the Old Babylonian period he was replaced in this role by Ishum, and in the Middle Babylonian period his name started to function as a logogram representing Nergal. Temples dedicated to him existed in Isin and Girsu. He was also worshiped outside Mesopotamia by Hurrians and Hittites. He might also be attested in sources from Emar.

Ugur's name was written in cuneiform as dU.GUR.[1] It is alternatively romanized as Uqur[2] or Ukur.[3] Jeremiah Peterson notes that an Old Babylonian exemplar of the Weidner god list appears to preserve a variant spelling, dU.GU2, which supports the reading Ugur.[1] A bilingual god list from Emar phonetically transcribes it in Hurrian as du-ku-ur-un.[4] According to Manfred Krebernik[5] and Volkert Haas its origin and meaning are not fully certain. [6] It has been proposed that it was the imperative form of Akkadian nāqaru, "destroy!"[5] A lexical list explains his name as a synonym of the Akkadian word for sword, namsaru.[6] However, another text of the same genre translates it as "butcher", ṭābiḫu.[5]

In Mesopotamian sources Ugur's name was used as a logogram representing the name of Nergal at least from the Middle Babylonian period onward.[7] However, originally he was his attendant deity (sukkal).[8] Wilfred G. Lambert proposed that he was initially imagined as a personification of Nergal's weapon, specifically a sword, though this proposal is not universally accepted.[5] After the Old Babylonian period, Ishum replaced him as Nergal's attendant.[8] In the Nippur god list, as well as in An = Anum and its forerunner, Ugur does not appear in the proximity of Nergal, though he is still explicitly identified as his sukkal.[5] He is placed between the sections dedicated to Zababa and Abu alongside his wife (tablet V, lines 52-53).[9] His spouse is attested both in An = Anum and its forerunner, and she bore the name Šī-šarrat ("she is queen").[2]

Due to attestations of epithets such as "the bloody" being applied to Ugur in texts from Anatolia it is assumed that he was associated with death and war.[6] In Hurrian context, under the title Šaum(m)atar, he was associated with two warlike deities, Nupatik and Aštabi.[10] It has been proposed that this epithet was derived from an Indo-European language, and that it might be cognate with Sanskrit somadhara (Milky Way) or soma-dhana ("containing soma").[11] However, it was in use chiefly in some of the Hurrian-speaking areas.[10]

In Hittite sources the logogram dU.GUR could represent Šulinkatte,[6] a war god of Hattian origin described as having the appearance of a young man.[12][a] In late Hittite sources, dU.GUR could also be used to represent the name Zilipuri,[14] a household god of Hattian origin.[15]

Worship

Notes

References

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